Pennsylvania’s education leaders come together to address one of the most pressing issues facing our schools: back-to-school safety and security. Featuring exclusive interviews with Senator Patty Kim and Representative John Schlegel, along with insights from a local chief of police, a school psychologist, a director of safety and security, and a superintendent, this episode explores how communities across the commonwealth are working to keep students safe, supported and ready to learn. From legislative perspectives to on-the-ground strategies, this conversation highlights the collaborative efforts needed to protect our schools.
00:00 - This program has been paid for by the sponsor and does not reflect
00:03 - the views of PCN.
00:27 - Welcome to the Keystone Education Report, where Pennsylvania's
00:30 - education leaders come together to tackle the issues shaping our schools
00:35 - in this episode, we're diving into back to school safety with exclusive interviews
00:40 - featuring a local chief of police, a state representative and a senator.
00:44 - Then we'll hear from a panel of experts, including a school psychologist,
00:47 - a director of safety and security, and a superintendent, all sharing insights
00:52 - to help keep our students safe, supported and ready to learn.
00:56 - First, we're joined by Senator Patty Kim and Representative John Schlegel.
01:00 - Senator Kim's currently serves as the Pennsylvania State Senator,
01:03 - representing the 15th district, which encompasses Lower Dauphin County.
01:08 - And Representative Schlegel was elected to serve the citizens of Lebanon County's
01:12 - 101st legislative district in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives.
01:16 - Thank you both for being here today. Absolutely.
01:18 - Thank you.
01:19 - Let's jump right into it.
01:20 - School safety is this that rare area where politics really,
01:26 - can be transcended by bipartisanship, approaches school safety, that one thing.
01:30 - We can all agree on that it's necessary. I think so.
01:32 - I mean, whether your, grandmother or a parent yourself,
01:36 - this is incredibly important for our district.
01:40 - Just recently, the Senate passed pretty much bipartisan,
01:44 - unanimously, almost, Senate Bill 246, which would require school districts
01:49 - to notify parents and school employees
01:52 - that there was an incident that included in a weapon.
01:55 - All right.
01:55 - So that passed quickly.
01:56 - I added my part to it.
01:58 - I managed it
01:59 - to make sure
01:59 - that school officials and parents would also know about bullying incidents.
02:03 - And I think we can talk further about what goes on and why we need, safe schools.
02:07 - But again, bipartisan in a went quickly.
02:11 - Representative. Yeah, I would certainly agree with that.
02:13 - I think there is no higher priority than safety.
02:16 - On behalf of our students.
02:18 - And what comfort does that give our community, our parents,
02:22 - even our grandparents, of which my wife and I, we have grandchildren in our,
02:26 - our schools.
02:27 - I think safety is so important and it's vital to the education of our students.
02:31 - They need to feel safe.
02:32 - They need to feel secure.
02:34 - And I think anything that we can do, whether it has to do with bullying,
02:37 - whether it has to do
02:38 - with clear communications, making sure that our parents know that
02:42 - that safety is our highest priority and that we're open to listening
02:46 - and engaging in in good, solid two way communication
02:50 - so that they feel that their interests are being heard
02:55 - and and most importantly, that that our children are being taken care of.
02:58 - So parents are sending their kids back to school right now.
03:00 - What what can you say to parents?
03:02 - What advice can you share?
03:04 - That we're really doing everything possible,
03:06 - and that there are things that have been done at the state beyond the legislation
03:09 - that's moving through, but, the work of PCC and others
03:12 - to really make sure that that our schools are as safe as they possibly can be.
03:16 - I had the pleasure of visiting all five school districts that encompass
03:20 - Senate District 15.
03:21 - And as I go in and out,
03:23 - these schools are much different from the school that I went to.
03:25 - I went to public school, and I want to tell you how many decades ago,
03:29 - but, the security up front, the one door that you have to come in,
03:33 - the showing the ID, I was surprised that each classroom is locked.
03:38 - You cannot enter without a key that's new to me.
03:41 - I know that they do drills.
03:42 - I know that the administrators assist forefront,
03:45 - that they want to protect their students.
03:47 - And they've put in a lot of things
03:49 - with some with the schools help, the state help, some without.
03:52 - But they're making it a priority.
03:54 - And I feel that the schools are much, much safer today.
03:58 - And you're a former principal, so you can speak to it from two perspectives.
04:01 - I absolutely am.
04:02 - And it's been an honor and a privilege to not only work in,
04:05 - but now represent the two school districts,
04:07 - in the hundred and first Lebanon City School District
04:09 - and the Cornwall Lebanon School School District.
04:12 - And I think that there are just so many procedures that we do have in place.
04:16 - And I think by now, at the start of school, parents know what those procedures
04:20 - are. Most of our schools, I think they have trained
04:24 - resource officers who, in many cases, once
04:28 - they receive that training or able to carry a firearm, and that piece
04:32 - is so very important because if there is an area of concern
04:36 - or should there be a need, to address an incident,
04:41 - I think research has shown us that a quick response is very essential.
04:46 - Fortunately, our schools are very close in proximity to our local law
04:51 - enforcement agencies, and not every school
04:54 - has that privilege and opportunity.
04:57 - But that is true in 101st.
04:59 - So I think that's very important.
05:00 - But, the neither Senator Kim or myself are going to go into a school today
05:05 - or tomorrow or any other time without whether the school staff
05:09 - know us or not, they're going to ask us who we are.
05:12 - We're going to identify ourselves and our intent for being in the building.
05:15 - We're going to have to show ID, we're going to have to have
05:19 - a visible school I.D.
05:21 - at all times.
05:23 - We also provide for the student support needs,
05:27 - whether it be for bullying, for anxiety, or for any other type of issues.
05:32 - You know, as a school, a trained, school counselor.
05:35 - But my wife and I, you know, both have been trained to,
05:39 - to try to address the needs of our students
05:42 - from a myriad of perspectives and then also connect with
05:45 - outside agencies that can best support our students.
05:48 - Again, ultimately, we want that in place of students are not only safe,
05:52 - but it also contributes to them, being able to learn.
05:55 - Senator, you mentioned Senate Bill 246,
05:58 - and bullying was one of the pieces that you had again.
06:01 - Talk to me a little bit about what were your attention to that?
06:04 - What what made you realize that that needed to be added to the bill?
06:08 - Having
06:08 - teenagers myself, I had one student who would
06:11 - one child who would tell me her whole day from beginning
06:15 - to end, and I'd have another child who would tell me nothing.
06:19 - And for parents, it is hard to know
06:21 - what is going on in schools if they don't want to talk to you.
06:24 - And so having communication with the school district
06:27 - is really important to something has happened.
06:30 - I need to know and I want to address it,
06:32 - whether it be my kid's fault or he hurt someone or she hurt someone.
06:36 - I want to address that.
06:37 - More information is going to be helpful,
06:38 - but I think the one bill that I think was badly needed is a red flag bill.
06:43 - Honestly, the extreme risk protection order.
06:46 - But if there is a student that shows signs of mental distress
06:49 - who may harm themselves or, harm somebody else,
06:53 - if there's a gun in the house, they need to take that away temporarily
06:57 - by a judge's order for some time until the student gets better.
07:01 - I really think that from the shootings that we've seen,
07:04 - these students are distressed.
07:05 - And it's too easy to get these guns.
07:08 - And we need to protect the students, and keep students safe.
07:12 - I feel very strongly about that.
07:13 - I want to ask you both, before we run out of time funding.
07:15 - So, you know, the state over the last several years, both sides,
07:19 - Senate, House, the governor's office have talked about funding.
07:22 - There's been more money, put into school safety.
07:26 - Is it enough?
07:27 - Should more be done?
07:28 - Can we do more as we look ahead over the next several years?
07:31 - You know, I certainly think that that is an ongoing conversation.
07:35 - And that's part of the review.
07:36 - One of the things that we do
07:37 - in, in school, in so many capacities is we monitor and adjust.
07:41 - And if indeed, as I said, I believe school safety to be our highest priority.
07:46 - I think that's an ongoing quest to to make sure that we are evaluating
07:51 - our procedures and our practices, our connection with law enforcement,
07:55 - the resources that we have, human and otherwise, to make sure that,
07:59 - we have things in place that our students are going to feel safe and secure.
08:03 - I mean, after all, last year,
08:07 - the state contributed $18 billion to to public education,
08:12 - to 1.7 million students, who we provided over
08:17 - $100 million to, to to promote school safety in our, our schools.
08:22 - And again, I think it's so important
08:26 - that we continue to be in tune to, to best practices
08:29 - to personalize, with our students, with our parents, with it,
08:34 - with our community, what we're doing, not necessarily
08:37 - in a very specific, basis, but certainly in an ongoing basis.
08:41 - And make sure that, to me, the litmus test is that our students
08:45 - and our parents feel that our schools are safe and sound,
08:48 - and that we do address any and all concerns that that may arise.
08:52 - Senator, the last word.
08:53 - Yeah, is this is an evolving problem that we have.
08:56 - And if we just keep in contact with Ada from the law enforcement, from parents,
09:01 - I think we can find a way that the students feel safe.
09:03 - It's up to the students. We want to make sure they feel safe.
09:06 - They're going to be the judges.
09:07 - If they feel like they can run to school and enjoy themselves, then we're winning.
09:10 - And as adults, that is our responsibility.
09:13 - But this is an evolving process.
09:15 - So constant communication, not just throw money at a problem and see if it works.
09:19 - Let's strategically put it in place where the kids will feel safer
09:22 - and they can thrive.
09:23 - Senator representative, thank you so much for taking the time.
09:26 - Thanks for having us.
09:27 - Thank you.
09:28 - Excellence isn't just a goal, it's a standard.
09:30 - The Great Schools GPS designation honors Pennsylvania public schools
09:34 - that go above and beyond, where rigorous academics, strong community
09:38 - ties, financial responsibility and resilience come together.
09:42 - Today, we're highlighting one of our GPS ribbon recipients.
09:45 - North Hills School District.
09:46 - In the summer of 2024.
09:48 - The North Hills School District launched Camp Kindergarten, a program designed
09:52 - to prepare incoming kindergarten students for the start of the school year.
09:56 - Taught by our kindergarten teachers in all of our schools.
09:59 - Students attended three hours a day, three days a week for three weeks,
10:03 - learning routines, making friends, and getting comfortable with school life.
10:07 - Families and teachers raved about the program's success, saying
10:10 - it made the transition to kindergarten smoother and less intimidating.
10:14 - And the kids couldn't stop talking about how much fun they had.
10:17 - We are thrilled to bring Camp Kindergarten back in 2025, and can't wait to help
10:23 - more students build confidence and feel ready for their first day.
10:27 - We're looking for the next great Pennsylvania school district visit great
10:30 - PA schools.com to share your success story or apply for the GH ribbon.
10:57 - We're pleased to welcome Christopher Robin Stein.
10:59 - He's the chief of police for Silver
11:01 - Spring Township Police Department in Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania.
11:05 - Chief, it's great to have you here. Thank you.
11:07 - We're talking school safety.
11:09 - And I know you obviously work with, multiple districts in Silver
11:14 - Spring Township, but a lot of what I think we're going to talk about applies
11:17 - across the state to all schools.
11:19 - What are some of the common safety concerns
11:20 - that you're seeing at schools with the start of the school year?
11:23 - I think a lot of people will focus
11:25 - on the more tragic incidents that they see because it makes news more.
11:29 - But our main focus is is definitely more
11:32 - towards the the individual level of bullying.
11:36 - Social media is a huge factor.
11:39 - And trying to get all parties to understand the best way
11:42 - to handle those things.
11:43 - Kids will be kids, but we need to help them, not let things get out of hand.
11:48 - I would imagine it requires an awful lot of collaboration
11:51 - with each of the districts within your area.
11:56 - How does that work?
11:56 - How do you collaborate with your local school districts?
11:59 - Communication.
12:00 - Know because everybody has a different set of rules. Yes.
12:03 - The main goal is always the same safety.
12:07 - Treating everybody fairly.
12:08 - But everybody does things slightly different.
12:11 - We're fortunate that our largest school district
12:14 - is an extremely large school district in Cumberland Valley.
12:17 - So we're able to work with them, and make sure that we start on the same page.
12:23 - I would think another major part of of working to ensure
12:27 - that our schools are safe, our students are safe is the parents, obviously.
12:32 - What advice do you have as a parent for parents that are sending their kids off
12:37 - to the start of the school year to to help ensure,
12:39 - that their students are safe, that schools are safe?
12:42 - I think personally, the most important thing is have
12:46 - open, honest discussions with your children.
12:49 - Age appropriate.
12:50 - You know your kids.
12:51 - You know what they can handle.
12:54 - And I would say that even though you know your child the best,
12:58 - they can handle more than what you think they can,
13:00 - and they're already hearing things and seeing things.
13:03 - So be honest with them.
13:04 - Tell them be careful.
13:06 - We love you. We want to take care of you.
13:09 - Here's the best way to go about doing that, you know, and reminding
13:13 - them of the things that we as adults think is common sense.
13:17 - I think the biggest thing is for parents, no matter what style of parenting you do,
13:22 - is to remind your child, we're here.
13:26 - We're always available to talk.
13:28 - This is safe. Tell us what's bothering you.
13:31 - So many kids are like, I couldn't tell Mom or dad this,
13:34 - and mom or dad or like, oh my gosh, they could have told me that instantly.
13:38 - You know, and remind to let them know.
13:40 - Keeping the lines of communication has to be, you know, so,
13:44 - I think about social media
13:45 - and, you know, obviously it's it's different with the impact
13:48 - it has on kids today versus, gosh, five years ago, ten years ago.
13:53 - How does your department deal with some of what our, you know, the bullying?
13:58 - Let's, let's let's take bullying because you mentioned that up front.
14:01 - How do you deal with it.
14:02 - And and what advice do you have for people
14:04 - to understand this, this new or emerging challenge?
14:07 - I think yes, the changes and it's ever evolving.
14:10 - That's the most difficult part.
14:12 - As a parent of two children in their 20s, it's
14:15 - so much different nowadays because it's nonstop it and I know
14:21 - one of the big pushes this year is our phones allowed in schools.
14:25 - And that's its own debate for sure.
14:28 - But boy, they are checking those phones
14:31 - nonstop and they're seeing if they're the victim
14:36 - of bullying.
14:37 - They are getting assaulted
14:40 - cyber every few minutes.
14:42 - And it can be so many different people.
14:45 - So I mean, our big goal is making sure we stay up as a police department,
14:49 - stay up on the trends, stay up on the
14:52 - the scientific end of it, of how can we see who's doing it to prove it.
14:56 - But again, trying to get your child,
15:00 - if you're a parent to understand, don't keep this, don't hide it.
15:05 - Don't be ashamed by it.
15:06 - Maybe you did do something
15:08 - that you're embarrassed by and that's now being held against you.
15:11 - But like Mom and Dad know,
15:13 - let us know because we can help you get through this cycle.
15:15 - That communication.
15:17 - One of the things that you were talking
15:19 - that I was thinking about is it's got to be so difficult
15:22 - if those lines of communication aren't open and the child's
15:25 - willing to speak up about, online social media bullying, what have you.
15:31 - For law enforcement to, to to do much about it to start with, I guess.
15:35 - Right. Somebody's got to speak up, I guess. Right.
15:37 - What I'm getting at, in order for you and your department to be able to engage
15:42 - and help to rectify the situation, we traditionally have to have a victim.
15:47 - A lot of families don't want
15:49 - their child to be, quote unquote, a victim.
15:52 - So they they contain it.
15:54 - They hide it, you know, out of embarrassment or fear of
15:58 - what happens next.
16:00 - I would say the absolute best thing is go into your local agency and talk to them.
16:05 - Here's my fear. Here's what I'm worried is happening.
16:07 - At the end of the day, even if you have an open
16:10 - and shut case of bullying, yes, your child is being bullied.
16:14 - We can easily identify who's doing it and we can make this a criminal case.
16:18 - You, as the parent of the victim, have the right to say,
16:23 - you know we don't want to do that.
16:25 - You. So you can't be forced into things you don't want to be.
16:28 - So and I think sometimes people are worried about that, especially,
16:32 - I think it goes everywhere.
16:35 - But here in our area, multicultural folks together.
16:40 - And they don't understand this culture.
16:42 - They don't understand their culture.
16:44 - It's talk.
16:45 - We don't have all the answers either, but we can find them out.
16:48 - And we are not afraid,
16:51 - as a local agency to say we don't know what we don't know,
16:55 - and we'll reach out at the county level, in the state level for help.
16:59 - And there's plenty of partners out there that are willing to help us.
17:01 - So chief, great advice. Thank you.
17:04 - Really appreciate all you and your team do. Certainly.
17:06 - Thank you. Appreciate.
17:07 - Excellence isn't just a goal, it's a standard.
17:09 - The great PA schools GPS designation honors Pennsylvania public schools
17:14 - that go above and beyond, where rigorous academics, strong community
17:18 - ties, financial responsibility and resilience come together.
17:21 - Today, we're highlighting one of our
17:23 - ribbon recipients, Tunkhannock Area School District.
17:27 - Tunkhannock Area School District highlights a building wide
17:29 - writing initiative at our primary center, where K-2 students are blossoming
17:33 - into confident storytellers, researchers and opinion writers.
17:38 - With support from dedicated teachers and bi monthly sessions with a Keys
17:41 - to Literacy trainer.
17:43 - Students are mastering narrative, informative and opinion writing.
17:46 - Highlights include kindergarten narratives inspired by the very lonely Firefly,
17:51 - second grade opinion pieces on Matthew and Tilly, and informative animal research
17:55 - projects all emphasizing comprehension, structure and evidence based writing.
18:01 - Their growth and creativity have been truly inspiring.
18:05 - We're looking for the next great Pennsylvania school district.
18:07 - Visit great PA schools.com to share your success story or apply
18:11 - for the GH ribbon.
18:34 - We're joined now by an outstanding group of panelists who bring
18:37 - a unique perspective to our conversation on school safety and security.
18:41 - Doctor Angela McMasters is a school psychologist
18:44 - who currently serves the Indiana Area School District,
18:47 - taught at Indiana University of Pennsylvania, and was named
18:50 - Pennsylvania School Psychologist of the year in 2023.
18:54 - Doctor Erin Scriven is the director of safety and Security for the Allegheny
18:57 - Intermediate Unit, and is the IU's first Director of Safety and Security.
19:02 - And Doctor Michael Vukovich is the superintendent of Wimber
19:05 - Area School District and a nationally recognized education leader.
19:09 - Thank you all for joining us today.
19:11 - Let's jump right
19:12 - into what I want to talk about mental health and school safety.
19:15 - What role, in your opinion, does mental health play in the overall school safety?
19:19 - And how are your schools or schools within your IU addressing it?
19:25 - Yeah, I think for me, I think the importance about mental health
19:27 - safety is about being proactive, trying to prevent these issues before they occur.
19:31 - So what does our system look like
19:33 - to really modify and meet the needs of our students?
19:35 - What we see
19:36 - look at the data across the Commonwealth, whether it's our pay survey
19:40 - or other screeners we have in our schools that kids are hurting.
19:43 - There's a huge number of students who are facing suicide ideation,
19:46 - thinking about suicide, contemplating suicide, attempting suicide.
19:50 - So I think we have to be proactive and look at that and try to treat it
19:53 - and address it before it becomes even more heightened.
19:55 - So I think that's one thing where I get a lot of schools
19:58 - for having productive and really large systems of support
20:02 - in place for kids to really beat them
20:03 - where they're at in each kid's needs are different.
20:05 - I think it's something important to be reflective of where we're at,
20:09 - meet them where they're at, but also be responsive to their needs
20:11 - because the needs are changing drastically.
20:13 - Absolutely.
20:14 - And it's really the interrelation of the idea of safety and mental health.
20:18 - You know, safety and security are two related but different terms.
20:21 - When we talk about security, you know, that typically you could
20:24 - you could more definitively define security.
20:26 - You could talk about access control.
20:28 - You talk about cameras, you talk about the presence of an SRO or SBO.
20:31 - You talk about all the different policies and procedures
20:33 - that are in place to try and secure the building. Right.
20:36 - But when we talk about safety, we'll often, you know, people often ask,
20:40 - do you feel safe?
20:41 - What makes you feel safer? Why do you feel safe?
20:43 - And that's really where the mental health piece walks into this conversation.
20:47 - It's it's build it. It's the relationships.
20:49 - Right. Like foundational to everything that we do.
20:51 - Anything in education is relationships and safety and security in particular.
20:55 - That has to be the key component.
20:57 - One of the things that we know helps to reduce violence in schools
21:00 - through research that's out there is that, having kids
21:05 - with meaningful, appropriate relationships to at least one
21:07 - adult regardless of their role, but a meaningful connection to an adult
21:11 - in a school helps to reduce violence and helps to make the school safer.
21:15 - And so fostering programs that do that, fostering appropriate relationships,
21:19 - having supports in place, finding ways to engage kids with safety
21:23 - in such a way that they feel like they're a part of it,
21:25 - as opposed to being something done to them,
21:27 - really is where these two worlds are inextricably connected.
21:31 - And I would add, mental health is health.
21:33 - So we talk so much about physical health.
21:34 - So I talk often with students.
21:37 - And the student body is very interested.
21:39 - So I primarily serve grades 6 to 8.
21:40 - They're very interested in mental health and advocating for supports resources.
21:45 - So just really letting students know where to turn.
21:48 - I think that's incredibly important.
21:50 - And just letting them know and give them the words.
21:52 - I think sometimes our students
21:53 - might be feeling things and they don't know how to say it.
21:56 - So that comes out as behavior or threatening remarks or aggression
22:00 - towards others.
22:01 - And so once those emotions can kind of die down a little bit,
22:04 - you can have good conversations about really what the root of the problem is.
22:08 - And I feel like students do well if they can.
22:10 - So kind of meeting them where they are, we can always kind of
22:14 - figure out the best way to support their mental health and well-being.
22:17 - But I always say everyone has mental health,
22:19 - so it's not that something's wrong with someone.
22:21 - Like something you said at the beginning.
22:22 - You talked about,
22:23 - you know, the students need the help, that there are challenges there.
22:27 - Put yourself in the shoes of a parent that's watching this right now.
22:30 - Talk a little bit about the signs and symptoms that we should be looking for.
22:34 - That might indicate that a struggle that a student is struggling, you know,
22:37 - are there things out there
22:37 - that people can be watching for to get ahead to, to to be proactive?
22:42 - Yeah, I think there's a couple of things.
22:43 - One, social isolation.
22:44 - What do we do and how we interact and where are we spending our time,
22:47 - who we are around.
22:48 - You know,
22:48 - we talk a lot in this day and age about, you know, the use of cell phone
22:52 - and technology.
22:53 - What does that look like? Is it structure, is it unstructured time?
22:55 - What sites are they on or are they with their friends?
22:57 - Are they isolated? What things are they looking at?
22:59 - You know, when we look at school safety, I think anyone would tell you
23:01 - there's always leakage, there's always something out there.
23:03 - It's always going to be found.
23:04 - And so but what we want to do is put kids in pro-social environments
23:07 - and it's a little parameters. And we just put structures in place.
23:10 - Like one thing for a parent, I do with my kids every night
23:12 - when they get home, the phone goes down and we have conversations.
23:14 - What happened at school today?
23:16 - Tell me three things that happened in school today.
23:17 - And it turns into a 30 minute conversation.
23:19 - So, you know, I love your question because yes, we're working conserving kids.
23:23 - We're also helping
23:23 - giving tools for our families to really address these issues as a face,
23:26 - because you see a lot of kids who face social isolation, you know, a lot of kids
23:31 - who face anxiety, depression, and the way to get around that,
23:34 - I think, is by building pro-social environments.
23:35 - I think that's crucial for parents to understand
23:37 - and to really foster at school, but also at home.
23:40 - I think parents have to understand, too, that it's okay to ask a school
23:43 - about these things and talk to the school not to be afraid to make a phone call.
23:46 - I don't know what to do about this.
23:47 - I'm concerned about this or even about kids, friends.
23:50 - You know,
23:50 - this is one of the things with the behavioral threat
23:52 - assessment teams that are mandated across the Commonwealth
23:54 - that, you know, part of the team's responsibility is to make sure
23:57 - that parents and the community are aware of the team
23:59 - and what they do and how they do it, and understanding that
24:01 - this isn't like
24:02 - we're going to pick this kid and follow him
24:03 - because we think something's going to happen.
24:05 - It's it's it's having the relationship understanding this is baseline behavior.
24:09 - And then when we see behavior that deviates from baseline
24:12 - for a period of time, it doesn't mean they're going to do something
24:15 - horrible to themselves at the school.
24:16 - But it's something to take note of and be aware of
24:18 - and bring those interventions into play
24:20 - and have the conversations, like you said, pro-social environments
24:23 - and making kids aware that these things are present as well.
24:26 - Utilizing tools, you know, to talk, you want the relationship.
24:29 - So they go and talk to someone about it or talk to the parents about it,
24:31 - but then making parents and kids aware of things like safe to say something
24:34 - where if they don't know who to talk to or they don't feel comfortable
24:37 - talking to, that information is relayed so that the school can intervene
24:40 - in a positive way.
24:41 - And I think just to jump on that point, I learned a long time ago, it's
24:44 - not what you say,
24:44 - but I say absolutely the way we approach parents,
24:46 - we don't want parents taking their kids are broken, right?
24:48 - All of us, 100%.
24:49 - And, you know, we want to make sure that parents
24:51 - feel welcome and secure to come talk to us about these issues,
24:53 - because this is a lot, I think, for any parent. Right.
24:56 - Our goals are not to process 1,000%.
24:58 - And I was just going to add, I find that a lot of parents
25:00 - need help through the process.
25:01 - So if their students are struggling, it's kind of like, where do I go next?
25:05 - And sometimes I don't think we realize how much red tape
25:08 - it can feel like there is like, you just want to care for your child.
25:11 - But now you're like, okay, I'm like, what about my insurance?
25:13 - Who do I go to?
25:15 - What is the next best step to make sure my child is safe?
25:18 - And so I think providing that support for families too,
25:21 - so they're not alone in the process is really important.
25:24 - And to that point, it comes down to communication.
25:26 - Absolutely right. It's how you communicate these things.
25:28 - It's the way you communicated, the manner in which you communicate it.
25:31 - It's having an open dialog,
25:32 - like the communication piece
25:33 - is so critically important because if people don't know
25:35 - that it's out there, don't know that these things are available to them,
25:38 - or don't feel comfortable having that conversation, you're dead in the water.
25:41 - Like, we need to stop having a conversation about school safety
25:44 - and security as this separate thing to education,
25:48 - and recognize that this is part of what we do.
25:50 - Like this is the job now, this is a part of the job,
25:53 - and we can't silo that and make it a separate thing.
25:56 - It's ingrained in everything that we do.
25:58 - Let me play devil's advocate.
26:00 - People that say, look, a job at the school is really teach my kid, right?
26:04 - Right. Reading, writing, arithmetic, what have you.
26:07 - It's not for all this other stuff.
26:09 - How do you react?
26:09 - I think, with asking us to do the other stuff,
26:11 - because society's been asking us
26:12 - to do the other stuff for the better part of four years.
26:15 - The one thing we do, we built a parent advisory council.
26:18 - We bring families in.
26:19 - We think we value the idea of teaching families
26:22 - why we're doing this, not just what we're doing.
26:25 - And that spends a lot of time.
26:26 - It goes back Darren's point about the importance of relationships,
26:28 - that kids can't be limited between teacher and staff,
26:30 - but also be between the school district and the community.
26:33 - So we foster a parent advisory council.
26:35 - They come in once a month and we go over our safety drills.
26:37 - We communicate upfront exactly what we do, and that's fantastic.
26:40 - Like letting people know you're not giving away the keys to the council, right?
26:43 - But letting people know what you're doing, how you're doing it,
26:45 - why you're doing it, being transparent that fosters trust,
26:48 - and that allows for those conversations to happen and helps folks recognize
26:51 - that we are doing the reading, writing, arithmetic.
26:53 - But this is also part of our responsibility, because when you,
26:56 - you know, you're handing your kids off to us.
26:57 - So we have a moral obligation and a legal obligation to keep them safe and secure.
27:01 - And here's the way that we're going to do that.
27:03 - We want you to be a part of that process, that conversation.
27:05 - And I would ask offer from the school psychologist perspective, with learning,
27:08 - it's really hard for students to access learning when they're carrying the weight
27:12 - of the world on their shoulders.
27:13 - And just back to connection and what you had shared.
27:17 - I always say connection, culture and relationships.
27:19 - It's the foundation for everything.
27:21 - Students are so perceptive, and when we have conversations,
27:24 - it never ceases to amaze me
27:25 - how intuitive they are about different interactions they have.
27:28 - And so that little bit of positivity,
27:30 - just catching a student in the hallway and saying hi, and you, it's
27:34 - that fine line if you don't want to punish students for feelings
27:37 - that they're having, so you can have all the emotions under the sun,
27:40 - but what do you do with them?
27:41 - So it's like finding that healthy outlet for students.
27:43 - And I really think helping students understand
27:46 - the connection between their bodies, which are changing anyways,
27:49 - and all the development that is typical development,
27:53 - but everyone's kind of blooming at their own pace.
27:54 - So just being aware of all of that and and not mental health isn't a punishment.
27:59 - School and being safe, all of it kind of just is so interwoven
28:03 - it's difficult to tease apart. And each hit it right on the head.
28:05 - I'll be honest with it.
28:06 - If we want the academic year,
28:07 - we're really not going to trust that we address the mental health,
28:10 - social, emotional needs of our students first, right?
28:12 - There are not two steps of high organization right there together.
28:15 - We have to really think about a system that is real.
28:17 - And I think students want a channel and an avenue.
28:20 - And I realize that my role is different in the schools.
28:22 - And but even just being a part of supporting teachers and looking at
28:26 - writing samples, keeping an eye on those kinds of things.
28:29 - So when you were looking for red flags, even for parents,
28:31 - what are students writing about?
28:33 - A lot of students writing about just their basic needs.
28:36 - Like, I wish
28:37 - I want to make sure my family has enough food or money or health insurance.
28:41 - So our students are carrying adult issues.
28:45 - And this is really where all the required training that the state now has for us
28:49 - really comes into place.
28:50 - That's part of the behavior concern element of of letting our adult staff
28:54 - know, you know, these are the things that we need to be doing.
28:56 - This is how we can be proactive.
28:58 - These are the things we need to be paying attention to
29:00 - and I think what gets lost in it sometimes too, is supporting our staff.
29:03 - There in the last word is yours. Thank you.
29:06 - We had ten minutes flew right by.
29:08 - Gary conversations.
29:10 - Oh, yeah. It's.
29:11 - Yes. We're gonna have to do a couple more episodes just on this important stuff.
29:15 - We really appreciate you all being with us.
29:16 - Thanks for having us.
29:18 - Thanks for joining us on the Keystone Education Report.
29:20 - Today's conversation on Back-To-School safety reminds us that protecting students
29:25 - takes all of us, from policymakers to educators to community leaders.
29:30 - Stay tuned for future episodes as we continue to explore the challenges
29:33 - and the opportunities shaping public education across Pennsylvania.
30:05 - This program has been paid
30:07 - for by the sponsor and does not reflect the views of PCN.